Linux Tutorials on the topic “kvm”

Proxmox Virtual Environment or short Proxmox VE is an Open Source server virtualization software based on Debian Linux. In this tutorial, I will show you the installation of Proxmox on a server that runs a minimal Debian 8 installation, e.g. in a datacenter.

Virtualization With KVM On A CentOS 6.4 Server
This guide explains how you can install and use KVM for creating and
running virtual machines on a CentOS 6.4 server. I will show how to
create image-based virtual machines and also virtual machines that use a
logical volume (LVM). KVM is short for Kernel-based Virtual Machine and makes use of hardware virtualization, i.e., you need a CPU that supports hardware virtualization, e.g. Intel VT or AMD-V.

Virtualization With KVM On A Scientific Linux 6.3 Server
This guide explains how you can install and use KVM for creating and
running virtual machines on a Scientific Linux 6.3 server. I will show
how to create image-based virtual machines and also virtual machines
that use a logical volume (LVM). KVM is short for Kernel-based Virtual Machine and makes use of hardware virtualization, i.e., you need a CPU that supports hardware virtualization, e.g. Intel VT or AMD-V.

Installing KVM Guests With virt-install On Ubuntu 12.10 Server
Unlike virt-manager,
virt-install is a command line tool that allows you to create KVM
guests on a headless server. You may ask yourself: "But I can use vmbuilder
to do this, why do I need virt-install?" The difference between
virt-install and vmbuilder is that vmbuilder is for creating
Ubuntu-based guests, whereas virt-install lets you install all kinds of
operating systems (e.g. Linux, Windows, Solaris, FreeBSD, OpenBSD) and
distributions in a guest, just like virt-manager. This article shows how
you can use it on an Ubuntu 12.10 KVM server.

Virtualization With KVM On Ubuntu 12.10
This guide explains how you can install and use KVM for creating and
running virtual machines on an Ubuntu 12.10 server. I will show how to
create image-based virtual machines and also virtual machines that use a
logical volume (LVM). KVM is short for Kernel-based Virtual Machine and makes use of hardware virtualization, i.e., you need a CPU that supports hardware virtualization, e.g. Intel VT or AMD-V.

Virtualization With KVM On An OpenSUSE 12.2 Server
This guide explains how you can install and use KVM for creating and
running virtual machines on an OpenSUSE 12.2 server. I will show how to
create image-based virtual machines and also virtual machines that use a
logical volume (LVM). KVM is short for Kernel-based Virtual Machine and makes use of hardware virtualization, i.e., you need a CPU that supports hardware virtualization, e.g. Intel VT or AMD-V.

Virtualization With KVM On A Fedora 17 Server
This guide explains how you can install and use KVM for creating and
running virtual machines on a Fedora 17 server. I will show how to
create image-based virtual machines and also virtual machines that use a
logical volume (LVM). KVM is short for Kernel-based Virtual Machine and makes use of hardware virtualization, i.e., you need a CPU that supports hardware virtualization, e.g. Intel VT or AMD-V.

Creating Virtual RedHat/CentOS/Scientific Linux/Fedora Appliances For KVM With BoxGrinder (Fedora 17)
BoxGrinder
is a tool that allows you to build virtual machines (with RedHat,
CentOS, Scientific Linux or Fedora as the OS) for multiple
virtualization techniques. Currently it supports KVM, VMware, Amazon
EC2, VirtualBox, and VirtualPC. This tutorial shows how to use
BoxGrinder to create a CentOS 6 KVM guest on Fedora 17 and also how to
deploy it to a remote KVM host.